Alumni Travel to Tech for 43 Consecutive Winter Carnivals

Jim and Sally Accetta (left and center) and Ed Anderson never miss a Winter Carnival.

In the fall of 1969, Jim Accetta, Carl Benz and Dan Bonner were first-year students
at Michigan Technological University, living in Douglass Houghton Hall. The three
freshmen met Ed Anderson, a second-year electrical engineering major. The young men
bonded over a variety of campus and residence hall activities, most notably Winter
Carnival.

Their first Winter Carnival in February of 1970 has evolved into a tradition. The
four friends and their families have used Carnival as their reunion site for more
than four decades.

Accetta and his wife Sally were back in Houghton last week, attending their 43rd consecutive Winter Carnival since leaving campus as a married couple in 1973. Now retired, the couple live six months out of the year in Del Ray Beach, Florida
and “travel the rest of the year.”

This year, because of medical issues, Benz and his wife Rena and Bonner and his wife
Frankie, a Calumet native, were forced to stay at home in Toledo, Ohio, and downstate
Corrunna respectively. Anderson, who works for US Steel in Southgate, Michigan, was
the only member of the group able to join the Accettas for their annual Winter Carnival
visit.

While Jim and Sally have made it 43 straight, the attendance records of their friends
are as nearly impressive. “This is only the second time in 44 years that all of us
haven’t been able to make it,” Sally Accetta says.

Their initial reason for coming back to campus in those post-graduation years was
a common one back then.

Huskies Hockey

“We came back for hockey,” says Jim. It was the Golden Age of Michigan Tech hockey,
and it just so happened one of their friends from DHH was one of Tech’s all-time greats,
Hall of Famer George Lyle.

“We came back to see George and watch hockey, and it just kind of turned into an annual
thing.”

Not that the friends needed much prodding, as Winter Carnival was an important part
of their lives as students.In fact, DHH was such a close-knit group, they led to a change in Winter Carnival
rules, according to Jim Accetta.

“We got along so well, and we were so well organized, we decided to compete with the
fraternities,” something that was unheard of for a residence hall, he recalls.

“We won the statue competition and pretty much every other event.”

Speed Skating Superstar

It was in the speed skating competition where the All-American Lyle lent a helping
hand—or a helping skate, as it turned out.

“George wasn’t playing hockey; he had to sit out a year because he had transferred
(from another school). So he was our speed skater,” Acetta explains. The skaters from the fraternities had
official looking speed skating attire and long Olympic-style speed skates, while Lyle
showed up in sweats and hockey skates.

“He was so dominant, he skated the last two laps backwards and still won,” Jim recalls.

Douglass Houghton Hall’s overall win prompted a rule change at the time, keeping residence
halls from competing with fraternities.

As the 1970s gave way to the ‘80s, Michigan Tech’s dominance in college hockey waned,
but that didn’t stop the friends from making their annual Carnival pilgrimage to Houghton,
now with children in tow.

Sally Accetta recalls some pretty large gatherings. “Around 1977 we all started having
children, so it seemed natural to take them along. Sometimes we had a couple of vans
and brought our own babysitters with us. “

Whereas Huskies hockey had initially been the motivation for the Winter Carnival trips,
the draw became catching up and enjoying the company of old friends and their families.

But time marches on, and in recent years, as nests have emptied, the family units
are small once again. Even so, the four friends and their spouses return to Tech each
February.

Their annual visits have become so much a part of Winter carnival local merchants
even prepare for them.

“Amy at the Travelodge makes signs and puts out flowers for us, and Victoria has items
for us that she normally doesn’t have on her menu (at Victoria’s Kitchen), to make
us feel welcome,” Sally said.

“There’s more of a party atmosphere these days,” he said. “You might have had a little
music while working on the statues, but the big party that the All-nighter is now,
we didn’t have that. It was pretty serious stuff.”

Anderson noticed a new sport since his student days on campus. “We didn’t really have
broomball then,” he says. “If we did it wasn’t a big deal. Now it’s a big deal.”

Accetta says the statues have changed as well. “The quantity of the large statues
has gone down, there are not as many big statues as there used to be, but the quality
and detail have certainly improved from our day. They’re using irons and things like
that. We never used irons, maybe a torch here and there, but that’s it.”

Girls, Girls, Girls

Another big change on campus didn’t go unnoticed by Accetta.

“There’s girls here now,” he says. During his first year at Tech, he says, out of
an enrollment of about 4,900 students, only around 16 were coeds. “It was so bad that
if you saw a girl on campus, you’d run and tell your roommate, ‘Guess what? I saw
a girl today.’”

Anderson says it was the campus activities that created a bond that time hasn’t been
able to break.

“Let’s face it, you’re pretty remote up here, so the more activities you became involved
with, the greater your experience. It forms a bond.”

Not only did Tech leave a lasting impression on Anderson, Accetta and their friends,
the friends made a lasting impression on Tech.

“The wooden sign in front of DHH, we made that,” Accetta says. “We noticed none of
the residence halls had signs in front of them. We got some old wood and made the
sign. I can’t believe it’s still there today.”

The sign remains, but the days of 25 cent standing-room hockey tickets at Dee Stadium
and basketball games at Sherman Gym are just memories. But like the sign,the commitment of Accetta and his friends to return for at least a few more Winter
Carnivals remains.

“We’ve said we’d like to make 50 in a row, and then see,” Jim said. “But who knows?
By that time, the grandkids will be old enough to make the trip with us.”

Michigan Technological University is a public research university, home to more than
7,000 students from 60 countries around the world. Founded in 1885, the University
offers more than 120 undergraduate and graduate degree programs in science and technology,
engineering, forestry, business and economics, health professions, humanities, mathematics,
and social sciences. Our beautiful campus in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula overlooks
the Keweenaw Waterway and is just a few miles from Lake Superior.